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The Trust is developing a new Membership Strategy and would welcome your involvement and feedback to help co-design the work we do.
You have been referred this page because your name has been placed on the waiting list for an operation on your eyelid and we want you to know what to expect. Eyelid surgery is usually carried out under local anaesthetic as a day case. If you have asked for sedation to relax you during the operation, you will be given special instructions about eating and drinking before the procedure.
This page provides information for people travelling by car and bus to Cheltenham General and Gloucestershire Royal Hospitals. We know that travelling to an appointment can be stressful, so please leave extra time before your appointment. This will allow time for parking. You will need to bring change with you should you need it. Hospital maps are available on our website and these highlight the locations of the car parks.
We provide diagnostic, treatment and rehabilitation services for patients with head and neck cancers. This includes mouth and throat cancer, including the thyroid gland, salivary and sinus tumours.
In an important initiative aimed at providing comprehensive care to young people experiencing mental and emotional health challenges, Youth Workers from the Young Gloucestershire charity are now being integrated into the children's ward at Gloucestershire Royal Hospital.
This page gives you information about having a Computed Tomography (CT) scan of the body. It explains how the procedure is carried out and some of possible complications.
This page gives you information about MRSA (Meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) and its treatment.
You may be aware of a BBC report on maternity services here at the Trust. This page provides some background, as well as answers to questions you may have.
This page will give you general information about having a barium meal or barium follow through X-ray and answer some of the commonly asked questions.
This page answers some of the questions you may have about your humerus fracture. It also gives you advice and information about how to manage at home. The humerus is the bone in the arm between your shoulder and elbow. Your injury is a fracture to this bone, near the shoulder. There is often quite a lot of bruising and swelling of the arm over the first few weeks. This is normal and resolves by itself as the fracture heals.
This page was developed by hair care professionals to provide you with standard hair care advice.
This page has been written to provide answers to some of the questions you may have about keeping your leg ulcer healed. If you have any further questions about your condition or treatment, please feel free to ask at your next clinic appointment.
by Matthew Little
We are incredibly proud of all our competitors and their supporters attending our first entry to the British Transplant Games. Some of the team share their stories below.
This page gives you information about the surgery you are about to have to repair your fractured lower jaw. If you have any further questions, please ask a member of the Oral & Maxillofacial team or contact us on the telephone number at the end of this page.
The Pathology Department can offer advice on all aspects of point of care testing (PoCT).
You have been asked to produce a sample of semen for analysis (examination). Semen analysis is looking closely at the sample, through a microscope, to see how many moving sperm cells are present and whether they are normal in appearance. The quality of semen is a vital factor in fertility and for this reason careful examination of a semen sample is of great importance. This examination needs to be done in a laboratory and may need repeating.
We're holding an information day on 20 March, in partnership with the Gloucestershire Kidney Patients' Association
The Emergency Gynae Admissions unit (EGAU) is located on the ninth floor of the Tower Block at Gloucestershire Royal Hospital within Ward 9A.